Qos Overview; Class Of Service - NETGEAR M4100 Series User Manual

Managed switch
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QoS Overview

You can configure Quality of Service (QoS) settings on the switch. In a typical switch, each
physical port consists of one or more queues for transmitting packets on the attached
network. Multiple queues per port are often provided to give preference to certain packets
over others based on user-defined criteria. When a packet is queued for transmission in a
port, the rate at which it is serviced depends on how the queue is configured and possibly the
amount of traffic present in the other queues of the port. If a delay is necessary, packets get
held in the queue until the scheduler authorizes the queue for transmission. As queues
become full, packets cannot be held for transmission and get dropped by the switch.
QoS is a means of providing consistent, predictable data delivery by distinguishing between
packets with strict timing requirements from those that are more tolerant of delay. Packets
with strict timing requirements are given "special treatment" in a QoS-capable network. With
this in mind, all elements of the network must be QoS-capable. The presence of at least one
node that is not QoS-capable creates a deficiency in the network path and the performance
of the entire packet flow is compromised.

Class of Service

The Class of Service (CoS) queueing feature lets you directly configure certain aspects of
switch queueing. This provides the desired QoS behavior for different types of network traffic
when the complexities of DiffServ are not required. The priority of a packet arriving at an
interface can be used to steer the packet to the appropriate outbound CoS queue through a
mapping table. CoS queue characteristics that affect queue mapping, such as minimum
guaranteed bandwidth or transmission rate shaping are user configurable at the queue (or
port) level. Eight queues per port are supported.
You can set the Class of Service trust mode of an interface. Each port in the switch can be
configured to trust one of the packet fields (802.1p or IP DSCP), or to not trust any packet's
priority designation (untrusted mode). If the port is set to a trusted mode, it uses a mapping
table appropriate for the trusted field being used. This mapping table indicates the CoS
queue to which the packet should be forwarded on the appropriate egress ports. Of course,
the trusted field must exist in the packet for the mapping table to be of any use, so there are
default actions performed when this is not the case. These actions involve directing the
packet to a specific CoS level configured for the ingress port as a whole, based on the
existing port default priority as mapped to a traffic class by the current 802.1p mapping table.
Alternatively, when a port is configured as untrusted, it does not trust any incoming packet
priority designation and uses the port default priority value instead. All packets arriving at the
ingress of an untrusted port are directed to a specific CoS queue on the appropriate egress
ports, in accordance with the configured default priority of the ingress port. This process is
also used for cases where a trusted port mapping is unable to be honored, such as when a
non-IP packet arrives at a port configured to trust the IP DSCP value.
M4100 Series Managed Switch
Configure Quality of Service
234

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